

Episode 117: Jonathan Rauch
Sep 30, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Jonathan Rauch, a prominent public intellectual and author, explores the epistemic case for free speech in his classic, Kindly Inquisitors. He critiques how our society collectively produces knowledge and addresses the dangers of misinformation highlighted in his work, The Constitution of Knowledge. Rauch emphasizes the importance of viewpoint diversity and freedom of inquiry. He also delves into the urgency of defending democratic institutions against authoritarian populism, sharing insights on the political consequences of secularization and the vital role of Christianity in shaping civic norms.
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Popper's Enduring Epistemic Contribution
- Jonathan Rauch credits Karl Popper for systematizing fallibilism and linking open intellectual life to liberal politics.
- He argues Popper's evolutionary epistemology and emphasis on error-seeking remain central to understanding science and the open society.
A Madisonian Epistemology
- Rauch situates himself between Popperian critical rationalism and Peircean pragmatism as a liberal empiricist.
- He calls his synthesis "Madisonian epistemology," combining Madison, Peirce, and Popper to protect knowledge-making institutions.
Falsification As Social Practice
- Rauch sees falsification as incomplete when taken narrowly but essential as the social, rule-based search for errors.
- He broadens falsification to include experiments, logic, aesthetics and other social practices that test claims.